How did the German Colonial Empire begin?
The Modern German state itself began only in the 19th century
when Count Otto von Bismarck, prime minster of Prussia, put
together the small German states that had been left by Napoleon,
when he had abolished the hundreds of small states. This process
was complete in 1871.

So Germany had no tradition of common action, and had had
no tradition of trading with the rest of the world as a single
state - of course, Hansa merchants had long traded with the rest
of the European world, especially in the Baltic and to Britain.
Some German states had taken part in the slave trade. However,
no German colonies had arisen naturally in the course of trade,
as had those of Portugal, Spain, the Netherlands, France and
Britain. Nor had German trading companies occupied any non-European
lands. Eastern Germany had been conquered from Slavs by Crusading knights - the Teutonic Knights,
possibly an imitation of the Templars.

Bismarck, who created the German Empire, had no personal interest
in colonies. Possibly he had noticed that by the middle of the
19th century the colonies were no longer very profitable. The
urge to have colonies seems to have come from German merchants
Kaiser Wilhelm II who envied the British Empire ruled by his
relatives Queen Victoria and then his cousin Edward the seventh.
He encouraged a popular demand for colonies. Thus there was formed
a German Colonisation Society to urge German imperial expansion
overseas and a Company like the earlier British East India Company
to carry it out.

The first of the colonies was German New Guinea - Papua in1884. It was the Berlin Conference
of 1884-9 that regulated European colonies, especially in Africa.

By the time Germany got interested in colonies much of Africa
had already been divided up. What was left were two sites in
West Africa: Togoland and Cameroon; a desert in the southwest
that became German South West Africa and parts of East Africa,
Zanzibar and the mainland opposite.

German occupation of its colonies was notably brutal. Namibia
was the scene of massacres against the Herero people,the Nama
people and others. (See David Olusoga) In Tanganyika there was
a resistance (the Maji Maji rebellion) in the center of the country
led by the peoples who had been affected by the invasion of Ngoni
peoples spread out from the revolution led by Shaka the Zulu. Many of the perpetrators
of the massacres became prominent Nazis after the first world
war.

Zanzibar was a sultanate
originally settled by the Sultan of Oman. It was disputed between
Britain and the Germans. In 1890 the Germans ceded it to the
British in exchange for Heligoland - an island close to the German
coast and occupied by Britain since the Napoleonic war.

Germans were also interested in the Pacific region. They occupied
Papua, part of modern Papua New Guinea. Spain sold them Micronesia
in 1885 after their loss of Philippines to the US. They tried
to make a protectorate in the Solomon Islands but exchanged them
with Britain to take Western Samoa.

How did the German Empire end?
During the first world war the colonies were conquered by allied
armies - the English and French. In Tanganyika there was an epic
campaign by the German general Paul von Lettow-Vorbeck who fought
a guerrilla campaign almost to the end of the war. In the other
colonies conquest was quicker. In West Africa Togo and Kamerun
were occupied by British and French forces. In Papua it was Australian
forces who occupied the German positions. In Samoa it was New
Zealand forces that took the islands from German administration.

At the peace treaty all the German colonies were given to
the victorious powers. In Africa they were divided between Britain,
Belgium, France and South Africa. In the east Australia got Papua,
New Zealand Samoa and Japan some of the Islands.

The Nazi regime dreamed of recovering the former colonies.

Legacy
There is almost no legacy of the shortlived German colonial empire.
There remained a few German settlers in Namibia who stayed
on after the territory was taken over by South Africa. In the
1930s many of them were Nazi sympathisers - members of an overseas
branch of the Nazi party - and cooperated with the Nazi sympathisers
in the Afrikaner National party that took over South Africa and
Namibia in 1948. The settlers had hoped for a Nazi victory and
that Germany would resume control over the territory. Many of
them cooperated enthusiastically with the apartheid system as applied by South African
administrators who treated Southwest Africa as though it were
an integral province of South Africa (despite its being a League
of Nations Mandate,
and later a UN Trust territory).

The author observed in the 1960s that the railways in Tanzania
still ran on rails manufactured in 1912 by Krupp.